A
master carpenter, shaped-note singer,
music teacher, and rhythm guitarist, Quay Smathers was a patriarch of
the Dutch Cove community outside of Canton, N.C., where he was born
(May 9, 1913) and raised. Smathers taught a generation of some of the
finest musicians and shaped-note singers in the South. During the 1970s,
up-and-coming musicians like David Holt,
John McCutcheon, Laura
Boosinger came to learn what they could from Smathers, who would
often offer visiting singers and musicians a place to eat and rest at
his home.

Smathers
learned shaped-note singing as a boy and later imparted his knowledge
of the sight-reading technique to countless others as a teacher at Mars
Hill College and Warren
Wilson College in N.C. and Berea
College in Kentucky. With his family band (which consisted of
his three daughters and two of their husbands), Smathers toured all
over the South and Midwest to festivals, events and colleges. Quay received
the N.C. Folk Heritage Award in 1991 and was repeatedly honored for
his contributions of preserving shaped-note singing and traditional
folk music. He died on Jan. 22, 1997.

Giving
shape to mountain music - Quay Smathers

Ride through Cantonor Western North Carolina for
that matterand you get a glimpse of the legacy Quay Smathers left
behind.

As a master
carpenter, he built funeral homes, churches, houses and countless pieces
of furniture. As a music teacher, he taught students who became prominent
folk musicians. And for nearly 50 years, he led the shaped-note singing
tradition at Morning Star United Methodist Church in Dutch Cove.

Throughout
the South and Midwest, Quay Smathers was synonymous with preserving
shaped-note singing and playing old-time mountain music.

But perhaps
more than anything, he imparted a warmth in his music, as if each note
came with a flickering tongue of the Holy Spirit, as if he were the
shepherd welcoming anyone and everyone through the heavenly gates into
the paradise of Christian Harmony church songs.

Born in
1913 and raised on a farm in the Dutch Cove community just outside Canton,
Quay was the second youngest of six children and the son of devout Christian
parents. His mother chose his unique first name from a tombstone, according
to his second wife Sue Smathers.
By the time he was 6, Quay began singing and learning music at his mother's
knee. One of the cove's old-timers, Bob Miller, loaned young Quay his
first songbook. It was the first of many old song books he would keep
as he preserved the tradition of shaped-note singing, a sight-reading
method of learning to read music used by church choirs.

As a teen-ager,
he learned how to sing the shaped-note hymns of Christian Harmony,
a particular song-book which had shaped-note songs.

Committed
as he was to music, Quay had a mischievous side as a boy, a trait that
developed into a sharp sense of wit as he grew older.

In his
younger days, his church's congregation found itself in a heated debate
over whether to use an organ. Quay didn't much care either way, but
he and a friend sneaked into church one day and switched the reeds around
on the organ.

So the
next day when the organist played music on it, all the wrong notes came
out. The church wound up getting rid of the organ.

Then there
was the time when Quay and some friends decided to skip chores, steal
a chicken and cook up chicken and dumplings. It worked out great until
they discovered their cooking pot happened to be a chamber pot.

Quay was
an avid fox hunter who roamed Dutch Cove with three or four hound dogs,
but he eventually abandoned hunting for the four-stringed tenor banjo
and soon became the black sheep of the family for choosing such an instrument.

"And
when he picked up the banjo, why that ruined him," Sue Smathers
joked.

Quay started
picking the guitar when he was 17 years old and then went on to the
tenor banjo. In the 1930s, he joined The Smathers' Family Band,
which was comprised of George, Luke and Harold Smathers (no relation
to Quay). The band became popular playing at local ice cream socials
and stuck together until World War II, when a couple of the members
were drafted.

"They
were the band in this area,"said Charles
Gidney, who grew up listening to The Smathers'Family Band and
now plays regularly with Luke Smathers.

Taking
advantage of the local talent, Quay learned from master fiddlers like
Aldie Smathers and Samantha Bumgarner and banjo pickers like Millard
Stamey.
By the early 1970s, Quay's three daughters were learning to play musical
instruments and took an interest in performing, so Quay would invite
musicians and young people to his house for Friday night jam sessions.
"And they all came to Quay," Sue Smathers said. "He didn't
turn one down."

At first
she was a little apprehensive about bringing long-haired hippies into
her home, but Quay assured his wife, "They'll make fine men."

"Quay
could see through 'em, I reckon,"she said.

Tad Wright,
who was one of those students, recalled how Quay once said he didn't
notice the hippie's hair, just the banjo music he was playing.

And if
Quay invited you to play, he didn't expect you to slack off any, according
to Laura Boosinger, a banjo
player who often came to play with Smathers.

He would
whistle a tune until his student couldn't help but learn it, his wife
recalled. And as they stayed to sing or playsometimes from 6:30
p.m. on up to 1 a.m.the musicians would get snacks or a home-cooked
meal from 'Mama Sue', as they called Quay's wife.

"My
mom would cut their hair on the back porch,"said Elizabeth Smathers-Shaw,
one of Quay's daughters. Guests could even camp out back and take showers
in the house as they passed through on the way to music festivals.

Looking
back, Shaw thinks there was more to it than just the fun of jam sessions.
Quay, who had been raised with strong Christian values as a child, was
imparting his virtues, his respect for family and his love to these
young men and women who came to him to play.

Those who
met him learned something deeper than music, according to David
Holt, another musician who came to the Smathers home.

"Quay
had a sense of how things should be,"Holt said. "And that
was in music and many other things. ... He loved it when young people
were learning."

Kirk Randleman
was a student at Mars Hill College in 1972 when he met Quay. Randleman
admits he didn't know a lot about music but was still invited to play
with Quay at the Lunsford Festival.

ÒHe
made you feel important,Ó Randleman said. ÒHe was one
of the best rhythm guitarists I ever heard.Ó
For a young musician unsure of himself, Randleman said it was a relief
to learn from a person like Quay who didn't get temperamental when you
made mistakes.

But the
master would also keep his students attentive.
"You're deviatin'from the tune," he'd say. He'd warn singers
and musicians not to 'bluegrass it',meaning not to play a song too fast
but instead keep it true to its old-time style.

In 1973,
Quay and his daughtersJune, Cynthia and Lizformed the Dutch
Cove String Band. Liz's husband, Lynn Shaw, and June's husband, Zeb
Jolley, also played with the band over its 20-year history.

They played
at festivals and colleges all over the South and Midwest, recorded an
album called Sycamore Tea, won best band awards at the local
Asheville Folk Festival and Smoky Mountain Folk Festival, and toured
the Southeast with the Southern Appalachian Cloggers.
The band took trips to festivals and colleges during the weekends, leaving
for a show on Friday and getting back Sunday.

But the
traveling took its toll. After visiting a festival in Remus, Michigan,
Quay gathered his daughters, took out a protractor and found Canton
on a map. Drawing a circle representing a 50-mile radius around Canton,
he said he would not travel more than 50 miles away from Canton because
he had heart problems and found it too tiring to travel.

Twice the
band broke the agreementonce for Quay to travel to Raleigh to
receive his N.C. Folk Heritage Award in 1991 and the other time
for a final band performance in 1993 at Carowinds when the Charlotte
Folk Music Society honored the band and awarded him for his preservation
of traditional folk music.

Though
he'd be off touring and playing with the band on weekends, he made his
living during the week as a carpenter.

He built
his house and filled and decorated it with homemade wooden dressers,
cabinets, birdhouses, frames and candle holders. When the family needed
extra rooms for new children, he built on a new wing and furnished it
with wooden dressers and shelves that he made as well.
Not bad for a teenager who built his first cabin with the shingles put
on backwards, making the roof leak.
Quay Smathers became a patriarch of old-time music and shaped-note singing.
He taught shaped-note singing classes at Warren Wilson College,
Mars Hill College and Berea College in Kentucky, and never
seemed to miss an opportunity to teach a new acquaintance about shaped
notes.

By the
end of his life, heart surgery and cancer limited his mobility, so he
gave up music and carpentry for gardening. But even with the change
of pace, he told his wife, "I thoroughly enjoy my life."

After he
died of cancer in January, hundreds turned out for his funeral, more
than two dozen Christian Harmony singers from as far away as Florida
came, and Kirk Randleman played The Carpenter's Song on guitar.
"He will be missed by all of us," Randleman said.